Parker Solar Probe Touches the Sun
Friday, November 15 at 7pm
On December 24, 2024, the will accomplish its closest approach of the Sun for this mission to help us understand the solar corona and solar wind. Join us for a celebration of Parker Solar Probe, along with a sister mission named that will launch in early 2025. ÌıDuring this event, we will premiere Humanity Touches the Sun, our newest episode of our full dome series Science through Shadows. ÌıWe will also be joined by Adrian Hill, a member of the Principal Professional Staff in the Embedded Applications Group at The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab, who will share even more details about the exciting solar physics that Parker Solar Probe and PUNCH will be contributing in the coming years. Ìı
Adrian Hill is a member of the Principal Professional Staff in the Embedded Applications Group at (joined 2000). He is the Autonomy System Lead for mission responsible for the system that autonomously detects and corrects on-board faults. He is also currently the Autonomy System Lead for (Mission to Titan, largest moon of Saturn). He previously led the development of the Autonomous Fault Protection Systems for several NASA missions including , and New Horizons (Mission to Pluto). He also was the Flight Software lead engineer for (Mission to Mercury) at APL and led Flight Software development for the Hubble Space Telescope replacement computer while working for the Raytheon Technical Services Company. He has a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the University at Buffalo (1986) and a M.S. in Computer Science from the Johns Hopkins University (2003).
Doors open at 6pm with a host of interactive educational activities related to the Sun available in the Fiske gallery both before and after the premiere and public talk from 7-8pm.Ìı